Advertisement
 
YOU ARE HERE: LAT HomeCollections

Heartland Town Rocked by Sex, Lies and Murder

Nebraska: Authorities say that after Scott Catenacci, 19, roughed up an 18-year-old who had rebuffed his advances, she and her friends conspired to stab him to death.

November 15, 1998|LARRY McSHANE and MOLLY WOOD | ASSOCIATED PRESS

BELLEVUE, Neb. — On the last night of his life, Scott Catenacci left his job at the Krispy Kreme doughnut shop, climbed into his car and drove through the darkness toward the Iowa border.

He was heading to meet some friends in a park, intent on selling his laptop computer. Those friends, authorities say, were waiting to murder him.

One week earlier, Catenacci and three of those friends had experimented with partner-swapping sex--"basically a group orgy," one later recalled. There was a problem: One of the two girls involved, 18-year-old Nicci Wetherell, had spurned Catenacci.

The 19-year-old became angry and allegedly roughed her up. Nicci and four friends spent the next week planning payback. On the night of Sept. 29, police believe, they exacted it.

Catenacci, a burly 6-foot-1-inch, 250-pounder, was surprised by knife-wielding attackers beneath the two-lane Bellevue Bridge. In the dim glow of the span's sparse red, white and green warning lights, he fought desperately for his life.

Catenacci's body, dumped in a tree-lined ditch on the outskirts of town, was discovered early the next morning by a man collecting recyclable cans.

Within 16 hours, Nicci Wetherell and four friends--two of them juveniles charged as adults--were arrested for killing their sometime friend and lover.

None of the suspects, ages 16 to 19, has expressed remorse, Sarpy County Sheriff Pat Thomas says. All five could face the death penalty if convicted in this tale that begins like a letter to Penthouse and finishes like a Stephen King novel.

Bellevue, with its adjoining Air Force base, has suffered its share of recent atrocities--a 1996 drive-by killing, the 1994 murder of a 7-Eleven clerk, the 1983 abduction and murder of two children by a serviceman.

But this homicide felt different.

This was not the work of outsiders. This was home-grown kids turning on one of their own-- Catenacci literally grew up on Main Street, less than a mile from the park where he died.

"It's like, 'Damn! This doesn't happen here,' " said Bob Williams, a retired Air Force officer who settled here in 1985. "This is a quiet type of town. . . . They sound like a bad bunch."

Scott Catenacci and his crowd were certainly not among Bellevue's best and brightest. One mother grounded her daughter just for allowing the clique into their home this past summer.

Brandi Glynn, 19, a teen mother who dated Catenacci when her marriage began to disintegrate, was sexually abused by her father, state records say. Nicci Wetherell faced a pending assault charge. Daniel Jones, 16, had a criminal record dating back to age 10.

Those three, along with high school dropouts Patrick Burden, 16, and 19-year-old James Hargett, were ordered held without bail for the murder. Brandi's estranged husband, Christopher Glynn, allegedly knew of the plot but did not alert authorities; his bail was set at $1 million, and the state took custody of the Glynns' son.

Burden's attorney, well-known local defense lawyer James Martin Davis, condemns the police version of the slaying as "presented in Jerry Springer terms--'rough sex,' 'a group encounter.' "

Against the unassuming backdrop of Bellevue, those terms seem all the more unlikely.

Named for its scenic view of the Missouri River, Bellevue was a fur post established in 1822 to trade with the local tribes. The First Presbyterian Church, erected in 1854, still stands in its Olde Towne section.

The town's population, 1,200 before World War II, soared to its current 40,000 when the Offutt Air Force Base opened.

It has maintained a small-town feel, though. Mayor Inez Boyd arrived in 1968 and still considers herself an outsider. It's a town where Friday night football is a major social event, complete with a performance by the Bellevue East Chieftains band.

It's where Catenacci, Hargett, Jones and Wetherell went to high school. But they shunned the school's organized activities; in their yearbook, seniors Catenacci and Wetherell each merit just a single mention.

In her senior photo, Wetherell is smiling like a starlet in a Hollywood publicity shot. It contrasts starkly with the wan, sad-eyed mug shot issued by the Sarpy County sheriff after her arrest.

The Tuesday night of Catenacci's death was a typical weeknight in town: "A Chorus Line" was playing at the Bellevue Little Theater, and local librarians prepared to celebrate "Teen Read Week."

Typical turned terrible once Catenacci pulled his car beneath the bridge linking Nebraska and Iowa, lured by a promise of $400 for his laptop computer. His killers set upon the overmatched teen like buzzards on carrion, the sheriff says.

One of the alleged attackers, his hands covered in Catenacci's blood, hugged and kissed his accused co-conspirator Brandi Glynn after the murder, she said.

"He said, 'I love you,' and I said, 'I love you,' " Glynn later said in a jailhouse TV interview.

Advertisement
Los Angeles Times Articles
|
|
|